What to expect of your time with us at St. Timothy’s.
St. Timothy’s now accepting applications for 2024 Mission Trips
More information can be found on our resources page.
2024 Home Repair Applications
Our Facilities
St. Timothy’s as three buildings on our property including a lumber rack and mower shed. The King building is a cinderblock originally intended to be a daycare center. It includes a licensed commercial kitchen, large meeting room, two classrooms (now used as sleeping rooms and air conditioned), and separate bathrooms with two showers each. The Saul’s outreach building is log construction with a large meeting room (currently used for church services although all furnishings are movable), a sleeping room for sixteen using built-in bunk beds, separate shower room (three with one being ADA compliant), and a bathroom with two commodes. The whole building has heat and air conditioning. Our third building is the caretaker’s house.
Diocesan Support for Western Kentucky Tornado Damage
While the disastrous tornadoes in Western Kentucky have overshadowed our flooding last spring, our own troubles have resulted in help for school children in Russell County. Each year, St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Glenwood, Maryland provides around sixty school backpacks for St. Timothy’s Outreach Center to distribute to students on Barnes Mt. and Estill County. Due to donations, Estill County schools were able to provide supplies and backpacks to their students this year. As a result, St. Timothy’s had many left over. Last week, St. Timothy’s, after hearing of a specific request for school supplies, delivered what remained along with other school supplies and around fifty dental packs of brushes, toothpaste, floss and mouthwash to Mother Chris Brannock and some members of St. Patrick’s in Somerset, relayed them to Russell Springs later in the week. It was a small donation, but over thirty students started receiving the supplies a week after the departure from Estill County.
St. Timothy’s: Alive and Vital Appalachian Ministry
The following article was first published in “Diolex Link:New from the Diocese of Lexington, August 17, 2018
In 1982, the Rev. Canon Phil Thomas came to Estill County with the hope of planting a new congregation. Part of his thinking was also how could the church help the less fortunate in this Appalachian county. The genesis was a storefront used clothing, book, and whatever else people might need store along with a worshiping community. During his visits he met two young women who drove the Head Start bus who invited him to ride along and see some of the area. They both lived on Barnes Mountain. As he dreamed about helping this area, he was told of a farm that was for lease with the option to buy. With the aid of a United Thank Offering grant and support from St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church, Roxborough, Philadelphia, St. Timothy’s Barnes Mountain was born.
From the start, the aim was to assist in the community, especially help the children. In the summer of 1983 we held our first summer day camp, six weeks long with around sixty children each day. We provided a breakfast snack, lunch and a snack before they headed home. It took many trips each day to pick up and deliver home the many children. With some local adults along with students from the University of Kentucky, Phil was also the Chaplain at St. Augustine’s, we provided games, bible stories, and educational activities along with crafts. One of the highlights were the two Commodore Vic-20 computers we hooked up to donated black and white TV sets, so the children could program them to make stick figures do jumping jacks and run across the screen. And yes, we had games too; Asteroids, Pong, and I still have Frogger on a cassette tape.
Times have changed over the years. The van is long gone, the community has grown smaller as children have grown, many graduated from high school and moved away for jobs. As the education level went up, the birth rate dropped. Recently one of those women who first introduced us to Barnes Mountain tried to count all the children on the mountain and could only come up with twenty-seven. Only one school bus now comes up the mountain. What has not changed is the need in the county. While over the years we have begun working off the mountain more and more, there is always work to do. Each year mission trips from across the Eastern United States come to St. Timothy’s to work. They volunteer to help with home repairs, day camps for children, repairs to St. Timothy’s property and to learn about Appalachia; it’s people, culture and geography, the challenges we face, and the accomplishments completed. Once seen as those “people like Catholics,” after thirty-four years St. Timothy’s is a central part of the county. Each year we receive requests from the Health Department, Senior Citizens center, and other community organizations and individuals to help with home repairs, funeral expenses, utilities, food, clothing, school supplies and more.
We have always celebrated community-from that first Christmas where we gathered outside in the snow around a large cast iron cauldron to feed on burgoo before our first Christmas party to today, we celebrate community. During the summer when school is out, we hold a weekly community meal. The Saturday after Thanksgiving we again gather for a meal open to all the community. a> Each year since that first, we hold our Christmas party to distribute gifts to local children. Several Saturday’s throughout the year we gather for a day camp for children, much smaller than those at first, but full of games and crafts and fun for young and old.One of the joys of working with St. Timothy’s is that we are willing to try almost anything. We have had a Co-op garden, held cooking, canning, health classes, have gathered to make quilts for Veterans, learned to weave and make Christmas ornaments to send to areas of the country who have experienced natural disaster. We have been a center for GED education, had the only Cadet Girl Scout Troop in the county, worked with Grow Appalachia, the Christian Appalachia Project, CORA, Episcopal Appalachian Ministries, and other groups and activities.
From the early days when we worshiped around the wood stove in the original log church, we still gather on second and fourth Sundays for “church” to celebrate the Eucharist. I still am reminded of the rector of one of our larger parishes said: “I hope one day [like St. Timothy’s] we too will reach mission status. St. Timothy’s Episcopal Outreach Center, as we now call it, is certainly not your typical Episcopal Church. Our official numbers are small, but the impact of this church has far outdone its size, both here on the mountain and more and more throughout the county.
The Venerable Bryant Kibler
Priest-in-Partnership, St. Timothy’s, Barnes Mountain
To “Bury the Dead”
One of the traditional seven Corporal Works of Mercy is to bury the dead. Unfortunately, this year we have been too involved in this ministry with having taken part in six burials in the first five months of 2018. While the loss of any life is painful, all but one of these deaths have had close attachments to our St. Timothy’s community. Four of our caskets have been used as we have lain those who have passed into the dust from which Adam and Eve arose. Several of those caskets were begun by our visiting mission trip groups with the linings being made by some of our local women.In most cases, these burials have taken place in family cemeteries where friends and relatives dig and close the graves by hand.
Many of those who have died have had little or no insurance, so the expense of a funeral totally through a funeral home can be a financial setback that might take years to overcome. For others, their parents and grandparents were buried in simple wooden caskets and they too wish to be sent off in the same way.Many have asked how I got into making caskets. When I served St. John’s Church in Corbin, KY, one of the church members was diagnosed with terminal cancer. He had become involved with the St. Francis Burial Society when he lived outside Washington, DC working for NASA. He expressed the desire to have a simple wooden casket and, having a small woodshop in the garage behind the church, I volunteered. Once his was done, I began another, for myself. Over the nearly three decades, I have completed six of my own which ended up being used for others. While the sizes vary, each one takes about eight hours work, depending on how much sanding is done; two-hundred screws, a little over sixty-six lineal feet of wood, bracing, glue and foam, stuffing, and cloth for the lining. While we never charge for the caskets, we have been lucky to have families, friends, and the local lumber yard make some donations of materials that have helped us to cover the $130.00 average cost for each casket. Last year, the teenagers of one mission trip took up a collection among themselves to assist.
At the moment, we have one more ready and claimed, and another partially finished. One item we do not have is a typewriter. As strange as it sounds, I have had to serve as the “funeral director” twice and St. Timothy’s as the “Funeral Home.” The report which must be completed for the state requires that it be typed. Finding a working typewriter these days is no easy task. After days of searching, we have located one. This was certainly not a course offered in seminary.
It is such a privilege to be able to take part in these final events in the lives of these loved ones as families and friends gather to give their final respects. May the souls of the departed rest in peace, may they rise in glory and may the God who created us hold the families in God’s loving arms.
Are you looking for a mission trip?
We all travel many roads as we go through life. This may help you decide if and where you should go to put your faith into practice.
http://placestories.com/story/162591
How to contact St. Timothy’s
By email: sttimsky@gmail.com
By phone: 606.726.0607
St. Timothy’s Episcopal Outreach Center
PO Box 656
Irvine, KY 40336
Trinity Wall Street Video of St. Timothy’s
Below is the video that Trinity Wall Street did of St. Timothy’s and two other congregations in the Diocese of Lexington. We are featured at the beginning and the end.
https://trinitywallstreet.org/videos/diocese-lexington-working-together